Pain Flashcards
Nociceptive pain
Stimuli:
Mechano -> free nerve endings
Chemo
- metabolites - K+, ATP, pH
- neurotrans - substance P, NE
- tissue products - histamine, bradykinin, nerve GF
- inflammatory - prostaglandins, leukotrienes, cytokines
Can act
- directly
- via modification/sensitization
- ex: PGE, bradykinin, NGF -> G protein -> PKA, PKC -> TRPV1
- causing release of other stimuli
Pain definitions
Allodynia - pain from non-painful stimulus (tapping)
Hyperalgesia - increased pain from painful (pin)
Hyperesthesia - increased sensation of any sort
Dysesthesia - wierd sensation (pins, needles)
Neuropathic - from nervous, usu sharp, stabbing
Nociceptive - tissue damage, nociceptors
Pain nerve fibers
Slowly adapting
Relatively slowly conducting
- A-delta (myelin) - 15 m/s, C (unmyelin) < 1 m/s
Release neurotransmitters at both ends
Peripheral -> sub P, neurokinin A, CGRP -> inflammation
- neurotrophic (BDNF) -> remodelling
Central -> zone of Lissauer -> poorly localized
Pain pathways
Peripheral fibers -> dorsal horn synapse (substantia gelatinosa)
- C fibers (slow)
- > layer I - marginal/specific cells - localized, sharp, stinging
- > layer IV, V - wide dynamic range - intensity, burning, aching
- poorly localized (convergent input)
- most viscera only through this pathway -> poorly localized
Neospinothalamic: marginal and wide dynamic range -> ventral commissure -> anterolateral tract -> VPL -> somatic cortex
Paleospinothalamic: wide dynamic range -> reticular thalamic nuclei -> broad cortex -> mood (also brainstem autonomic)
Localization of pain
Generally poor due to convergent fibers
Viscera - only through convergent pathway
Trigeminal - synapse convergent with cervical, etc
- location is less diagnostic than provoke/palliate, associated sx
Pain inhibitory pathways
A-beta - touch, pressure, proprioception (rubbing toe)
-> inhibitory interneurons in dorsal horn
C fibers -> enkephalinergic interneurons -> opiate receptors
- temporary inhibition after initial stimulus
Descending: periaqueductal gray -> medulla -> interneurons
- raphe -> serotonin, lateral medulla -> NE
- all levels have enkephalinergic and opiate receptors
Pain control strategies
Opiates - activate suppression, directly inhibit -> dependency
Serotonin or NE - esp good for chronic or neuropathic
Ca and Na channels - gabapentin, etc
Central pain syndromes
Lesion, chronic -> deafferentation -> loss of inhibitory/GABA
Severe pain, difficult to treat
ex: thalamic pain syndrome
Cortical pain effects
Similar to depression!
- inc ant cingulate, medial frontal (interpretation, reaction)
- thalamus -> attention
- dec post cingulate
Facilitation
Similar mechanisms to hippocampal memory
- short term adaptation - PKA
- long-term potentiation
- partial depolarization + NMDA -> Ca -> changes in sensitivity
- also neurotrophic release (BDNF -> tyrosine kinase TRP)
- from both glial cells and activated pain axons